2^32 and divide by 100. That is the number of seconds until 32-bit
os's flip.
2^32 and divide by 8640000 and that is the number of days, which
is 497. My server at work went 587 days until i decided to reboot it
since it runs a critical piece of software and i though i should "refresh"
the OS (note that i say refresh, not reboot. hehe).

Longest I've seen is an AIX DNS server go about 1100 days before
losing power (ups failed too). I hope they fix the 497 day counter in
linux kernels soon by using a floating point number instead--at least
for us uptime freaks. :)


At 03:50 PM 4/19/01 -0500, you wrote:
>It's close to flipping over.  Don't they flip around 488 days or so?
>
>One of my boxes just recently flipped.  It shows 19 days of uptime now.
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Nate Carlson [mailto:natecars at real-time.com]
>> Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 3:38 PM
>> To: Twin Cities Linux User Group
>> Subject: [TCLUG] cool. high uptime. :)
>> 
>> 
>> [rte at server ~]$ free
>>              total       used       free     shared    
>> buffers     cached
>> Mem:         14772      14392        380       9760        
>> 984       5100
>> -/+ buffers/cache:       8308       6464
>> Swap:       136512       7964     128548
>> [rte at server ~]$ uptime
>>   3:37pm  up 484 days,  2:47,  2 users,  load average: 0.06, 
>> 0.03, 0.00
>> [rte at server ~]$
>> 
>> this is one of our client's file servers... not bad for a 
>> network of 10 or
>> so... :)
>> 
>> -- 
>> Nate Carlson <natecars at real-time.com>   | Phone : (952)943-8700
>> http://www.real-time.com                | Fax   : (952)943-8500
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> tclug-list mailing list
>> tclug-list at mn-linux.org
>> https://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list
>> 
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